Punishing yourself, as it's going to be slow and unusable on a normal system. :)However, virtualisation works well as a backup system to use to recover a borked hackintosh (e.g. Make bootable usb installers, grabbing kexts, running chamaleon, reconfiguring clover and so on).

I tried once to install macos on Virtual Box and VMware, with no success. It just keeps rebooting while loading the installer. I only managed it by downloading a virtual drive already with it installed. OF COURSE I was suspicious, but since it was the only possible way to get it working... 🤷🏽‍♂️

I bought a MacBook Pro with Final Cut Pro X to do my video editing. When I run FCP X my laptop, the fan starts running full blast and the entire keyboard area gets extremely hot. After a while, my mouse pointer will start to jump and skate all over the screen randomly clicking on items and I must do an emergency power off by the power button to save everything and let it all cool down. Building a desk top hackintosh seems like a good idea.There, I said it, I want you to build an awesome hackintosh to do final cut pro X video editing. I might even buy it from you!(p.s. I love your vids)

Great an in the same time terrible video. 99 % of what you say for me and maybe 99% of the regular users will be an alien language. No i don't understand and even if I try to follow will never be possible to make the same thing. It is not difficult. It is extremely difficult for most of us.

Got it figured out: for those curious to know... I force ejected the Install High Sierra "disk4" on the desktop, then I located the cdr.dmg file which just needs to be converted and did not for me for whatever reason to a windows compatible iso file. I navigated to the Applications folder and opened terminal from there. Within Terminal I did the following command without quotes "hdiutil convert HighSierra.cdr.dmg -format UDTO -o /tmp/HighSierra.iso" and then "mv /tmp/HighSierra.iso.cdr ~/Desktop/HighSierra.iso" and it converted fine. Onward to the next steps!